With the end of the financial year fast-approaching in Australia, now is the time to review your portfolio and decide whether to leverage a tax loss selling strategy to help offset any capital gains you may have incurred this year.

What is tax loss selling?

According to Investopedia, tax loss selling (or tax loss harvesting) is “the selling of securities at a loss to offset a capital gains tax liability.” In other words, tax loss selling involves selling a losing investment in order to generate capital losses that offset any capital gains.

Notes on tax loss selling

The amount of money you can save in taxes through tax loss selling depends on your tax rate (individual/trust, SMSF, or company).

Higher tax rates apply for investments you’ve held for a year or less (short-term capital gains), than for investments you’ve sold after holding them for longer than a year.

Although many investors leverage tax loss selling toward the end of the year, you may harvest tax losses at any time.

Tax loss selling example

Let’s look at a hypothetical example to help explain how tax loss selling works.

Let’s say you were lucky enough to buy CSL (ASX: CSL) back in 2012 when it was trading at $38.75. It’s currently sitting at $191.60, so you’ve incurred a total annualised return of 69%.

You have also taken a big loss on formerly high-flying Retail Food Group (ASX: RFG), which you bought at $5.69 back in 2014, but is now only worth $0.57– a total loss of -19.37%.

While you could hold onto RFG in the hopes that it will someday bounce back, another option is to sell both RFG and CSL before the end of the year to offset about half the gain in your CSL stock with the RFG sale. Doing so may not only soften the blow of the loss – but also encourage you to move on to new opportunities next year.

Model your tax loss selling opportunities with Sharesight

If you’ve taken some losses this year, Sharesight can help you decide how to offset your gains. The Unrealised CGT Report:

Displays the CGT position for all your holdings which are not yet sold.

Breaks-up the CGT gains into short and long term, and shows your losses as well.

Models the taxable income that would arise if the shares were sold on the report date.

The report uses the ‘discount method’ for shares that have been held for more than 1 year and the ‘other method’ for shares held for less than one year. The discount rate is based on the tax settings of an Australian portfolio:

Individuals / Trust – CGT discount of 50 %

Self Managed Super Fund – CGT discount of 33⅓ %

Company – CGT discount of nil

The report also allows you to specify the sale allocation method at the overall portfolio and individual holding level to determine your optimum position, including:

First In, First Out (FIFO) – Sharesight assumes that you sell your longest held shares first.

Last In, First Out (LIFO) – Sharesight assumes that you sell your most recently purchased shares first.

Minimise CGT – Sharesight assumes that you sell shares that will result in the lowest capital gains tax first. This method is more sophisticated than the ‘Minimise capital gain’ method because it takes into account the Australian CGT discounting rules.

Notes on the Unrealised CGT Report

The Unrealised CGT report is designed for forecasting purposes only. Refer to the Capital Gains Tax Report to calculate your actual (realised) taxable capital gain income for a specific period.

Carry forward losses from the previous reporting period may be entered by clicking on the ‘Advanced Options’ link.

It’s a good idea to run the report throughout the year, not just at the end, in order to stay on top of opportunities to offset gains and losses throughout the year.

You may want to share secure portfolio access with your accountant and/or adviser, so they can keep this in mind as well.

Visit the Unrealised CGT Report help page for more information.

One note of caution

The Australian Tax Office has rules that prevent you from selling a stock in one financial year to realise a capital loss event, only to buy that stock again in the new financial year. Sharesight Executive Director Andrew Bird wrote about this last year, using Slater and Gordon (ASX: SGH) as an example:

Let’s say that despite the hammering you have taken on SGH you think it is now super cheap and poised for a return to greatness. You sell SGH to realise the loss and then buy it back again to position for the rebound. This is know as a “wash sale” and the ATO takes a very dim view of this. They will disallow the loss if the sole intention of the sale was to minimise tax. So if you are going to sell, make sure you really mean it. If you still believe in that stock then choose a different “loser” to sell to offset your gain.

Save even more by claiming your subscription

Selling a share and realising a capital loss is never an easy decision, but at least by tax loss selling at the right time, you can offset some of those losses against gains made during the financial year. And while the Unrealised CGT Report is available exclusively on Sharesight Investor or Expert plans, Australian tax residents can claim next year’s subscription fee on this year’s tax return by upgrading, then requesting and paying their invoice before 30 June1. As a bonus, when you pre-pay for an annual subscription, you get 1 month free.

Further insights

Important Disclaimer: We do not provide tax advice. Make sure you seek appropriate tax advice before implementing the ideas in this post. 1If you derive income from the sharemarket, your Sharesight subscription may be tax deductible. Check with your accountant for details.